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	<title>Known Articles &#187; bear</title>
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		<title>All About Santa Claus</title>
		<link>http://knownarticles.com/all-about-santa-claus/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Mar 2010 17:39:36 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://knownarticles.com/?p=4931</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s only fitting that since Santa Claus has the magnificent capability to visit homes around the world in a single night that more than one place would claim to be his home. It&#8217;s common belief that Santa hails from the wintry North Pole, but folks in Finland will also tell you that Santa calls that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s only fitting that since Santa Claus has the magnificent capability to<br />
visit homes around the world in a single night that more than one place would<br />
claim to be his home. It&#8217;s common belief that Santa hails from the wintry North<br />
Pole, but folks in Finland will also tell you that Santa calls that country his<br />
home. To prove it, the Finns will even invite you to visit Santa in his workshop<br />
before Christmas or during the year and talk with Santa Claus as he and his<br />
elves busy themselves for their end-of-year Christmas expedition around the<br />
globe.<br />
The popularity in America today of the images and legend of Santa Claus<br />
can be traced to the poem, &#8216;Twas the Night Before Christmas,&#8217; that was written<br />
by Clement Clarke Moore in 1822. In that poem, Moore described St. Nicholas as a<br />
jolly fellow who flew from house to house in a sleigh pulled by reindeers and<br />
waited for children to go to bed on Christmas Eve before he came down the<br />
chimney to deliver Christmas presents for them.<br />
Following the distribution of that poem, the popular magazine Harper&#8217;s Weekly<br />
published cartoons by Thomas Nast between 1863 and 1886 that depicted Santa as a<br />
cheerful fellow with a large round belly and long white beard who wore a bright<br />
red suit that was trimmed with white fur. In those cartoons, Santa also held a<br />
sack, which was filled with toys for boys and girls, over his shoulder. The<br />
cartoons also showed Santa reading letters from good boys and girls, working in<br />
his workshop with his elves, checking his list to make sure he had all the<br />
required toys and even showed his wife, Mrs. Claus.<br />
The tradition of Santa Claus was brought to America however by Dutch colonists<br />
who settled in New York City, which was called New Amsterdam at the time.<br />
The real St. Nicholas is said to be a minor saint from the 4th Century with a<br />
reputation for generosity and kindness that gave rise to legends of many<br />
miracles that he performed for the poor and unhappy. One of the stories about<br />
the legend of St. Nicholas is that he saved three poor girls who were sisters<br />
from being sold into a life of slavery or prostitution by their father.<br />
According to the legend, Santa Claus provided the girls with a dowry so that<br />
they could get married.<br />
The legend of St. Nicholas led to hundreds of people being devoted to him and<br />
consequently thousands of European churches became dedicated to him. After the<br />
Reformation period however, widespread practice and worship of St. Nicholas<br />
disappeared in European countries that were Protestant, except in Holland where<br />
the legend of St. Nicholas continued. St. Nicholas was known as Sint Nikolaas<br />
but that was later corrupted to Sinter Klaas.<br />
Dutch colonists took this tradition of Sinter Klaas to New York City where it<br />
was adopted using the Englist name of Santa Claus. Over time, the Dutch legend<br />
of the kindly saint was combined with old Nordic folktales about a magician who<br />
punished naughty children and rewarded good ones with presents to give rise to<br />
the stories that now exist about Santa Claus.<br />
The red and white-trimmed suit of Santa Claus is believed to be the colors that<br />
the original St. Nicholas worebecause red and white were the colors of the robes<br />
worn by traditional bishops. It is also believed that the Coca Cola Co. played a<br />
role in what is regarded as the popular look of Santa Claus today through<br />
paintings by artist Haddon Sundblom that were placed in some of the company&#8217;s<br />
advertisement between 1931 and 1964.</p>
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